Steel-nerved McDowell clinches Cup for Europe

NEWPORT, Wales, (Reuters) – Graeme McDowell withstood  the greatest pressure of his career to secure the winning point  as Europe, led out by Ian Poulter and Luke Donald, regained the  Ryder Cup after fending off a brilliant United States fightback  on Monday.

Northern Irishman McDowell, playing in the final singles  match at Celtic Manor with everything on the line, held his  nerve on the 17th to beat Hunter Mahan 3&1 and give the home  team victory by 14-1/2 points to 13-1/2.

After a seemingly interminable week of rain delays and the  first Monday finish at a Ryder Cup, the patient fans who turned  up to watch the biennial team competition in big numbers were  blessed with a last day to savour.

Poulter crushed Matt Kuchar 5&4 and Donald beat Jim Furyk  one-up before the Americans clawed their way back, rookie Rickie  Fowler stealing a valuable half after brilliantly birdying the  last four holes against Italian Edoardo Molinari.

With the overall score tantalisingly poised at 13-1/2  13-1/2, McDowell sank a curling birdie putt from 12 feet on the  16th green to go two up on Mahan before securing the win with a  conceded par at the 17th.
European players, caddies and hundreds of fans swarmed  across the green to swamp McDowell in jubilant celebration as  chants of “Ole, Ole, Ole,” echoed across the Usk valley and  champagne bottles were uncorked.

“To captain this winning team was the proudest moment of my  golfing career,” said beaming captain Colin Montgomerie. “They  all played magnificently, they all gave 110 percent and that’s  all I could ask.

“I just had to rely on certain people at certain times.  Graeme McDowell was put there for a good reason, he’s full of  confidence and that showed. That birdie on 16 was quite  unbelievable.”

U.S. Open champion McDowell, who won the Wales Open on the  same Celtic manor course in June, said he had never felt such  pressure, even on the way to his first major title at Pebble  Beach.

“The U.S. Open felt like a back nine with my dad back at  Portrush compared to that,” he said. “I’ve never felt that  nervous on a golf course in my life before.”

It was the first time the Cup had been decided in the bottom  match since Hale Irwin benefitted from Bernhard Langer’s missed  putt at Kiawah Island in 1991.

Spare a thought, though, for Mahan who had fought back  against McDowell to one down with three holes to play before  succumbing to nerves and fluffing his chip.

Distraught, he was barely able to speak later on in the U.S.  team’s news conference.
The home team led by three points going into the last-day  singles thanks to their astonishing five wins and a half  performance on Sunday but the Americans cut the deficit to one  when Dustin Johnson and Steve Stricker both struck early to beat  Martin Kaymer and Lee Westwood.

Poulter, who screamed in delight after draining a 25-footer  to birdie the third, then notched Europe’s first point of the  day on the 14th green.
Donald, playing in the third match, was three up on Furyk  after 13 holes but had to hold off a late surge by the American  before sealing the win par at the last.  “I knew Jim was going to be a really tough opponent,” said  Donald. “He put some pressure on me at the end but I was glad to  get a point.”

Pony-tailed Spaniard Miguel Angel Jimenez, at 46 the oldest  player on either team, never trailed in his match against U.S.  rookie Bubba Watson before winning 4&3 to give Europe a  seemingly commanding 13-9 lead.

However, the U.S. edged closer as rookie Jeff Overton came  from two down to beat Ross Fisher 3&2 after the Briton bogeyed  four of his last five holes.
World number one Tiger Woods added more red for the U.S.  with a sizzling display as he overwhelmed Italy’s Francesco  Molinari 4&3.
Woods had gone two down after two before covering his last  seven holes in seven under, the highlight a hole-out from the  fairway to eagle the par-four 12th.
QUICK START      “I just stayed patient,” Woods said after winning his third  point this week out of a possible four.
“Phil Mickelson, who had charged four up after four holes  against Swede Peter Hanson, put the U.S. just one point behind  at 13-12 with a 4&2 win, scoring his first point of the  competition and ending a run of three singles defeats.

Rookie Fowler then produced his late birdie blitz, sinking a  curling 15-footer at the last, to earn a battling half.
Moments later Zach Johnson beat Irishman Padraig Harrington  to level the score before McDowell gave European fans a day to  remember.
The U.S. came desperately close to emulating their victory  at Brookline in 1999, when they triumphed after trailing 10-6  going into the last-day singles, and captain Corey Pavin paid  tribute to his players.

“We are a team and I was proud of every one of them and how  they played. How they fought, how they kept at it out there,” he  said. “We would win as a team and lose as a team.

“There were many points it seemed this week that momentum  was going against us, and they kept fighting back and fighting  back. And as I said, we nearly got there today.”